Ethiopian ethnic minority groups also allege human rights abuses against East African country's government
CBC Canada || Hundreds of people gathered on Manitoba’s legislative grounds on Sunday carrying Ethiopian flags and signs that said “No More.”
They rallied to raise awareness about a bloody war in Ethiopia and to call on the Canadian government to do more to support the east African country’s government in its fight against what they say is a terrorist organization, the Tigray People’s Liberation Front.
Winnipeg’s No More rally was part of a number of similar protests across the country on Sunday.
“Canada, as an advocate for peace and stability, as a role model in the world, proclaiming peace and stability, Canada has to do more, specifically supporting … the internally displaced people,” said Fisaha Unduche, who helped organize the rally.
As the government of Prime Minister Abiy Ahmed struggles to keep the liberation front from encroaching on the capital, millions are caught in the fray.
More than two million people have been displaced, and thousands have been killed, Unduche said.
On Saturday, the federal government urged any Canadians currently in to leave the country immediately as Canada’s ability to provide consular assistance in parts of the country is Ethiopia extremely limited.
Although the conflict in Ethiopia has made headlines over the last year, the TPLF was started in the 1970s and held power in the country for many years, up until 2018.
“We have fought for many years, for 27 years, the TPLF has been killing, murdering, torturing, raping, stealing from Ethiopian people. After many struggles and fights we have got our freedom, we have democracy,” he said.
“What we hear is really bad … Wherever they [go], it’s total destruction,” said Alex Gizaw, who represents the group Ethio-Dejen in Manitoba, which supports internally displaced people in Ethiopia.
Meanwhile, western countries like the U.S. are interfering in the region by siding with the TPLF and causing more issues than they’re solving, organizers say.
“What’s happening on the front line, what’s going on to our people is not being depicted properly and accurately. That’s what we know,” Tegegn said.
“Any interference caused by the misinformation creates a major backfire in the region. We’re calling the Western countries, specifically the United States, take off your hands of Ethiopia, let Ethiopia solve its own problems by themselves,” Unduche added.
Discrimination against Tigray and Oromo people
In contrast, some Ethiopians living in Manitoba who are from the Tigray and Oromo regions of the country say the Ethiopian government discriminates against their ethnic groups and is committing human rights abuses.
Independent groups like Amnesty International allege human rights abuses on both sides of the conflict.
Some refugees living in the Winnipeg haven’t been able to reach family in battle zones for months because of a communication blackout.
They don’t know if their loved ones are alive or dead.
Earlier this month, Prime Minister Ahmed urged residents of the capital Addis Ababa to take up arms against the rebels a day after a state of emergency was declared.
Advocates for people in the Tigray and Oromo regions are asking Canada to help protect their safety and ensure humanitarian groups are allowed to enter the region.